South African cricket's debt to Peter Pollock is threefold: as the country's
premier fast bowler during the 1960s, the last decade before South Africa's
international isolation; as convener of selectors during the 1990s, when he
gave an inexperienced team a vision and pattern (unsurprisingly based on
disciplined and relentless seam bowling) that has made the side one of the
game's top two teams; and as Shaun Pollock's father he played a not
insignificant role in providing South Africa with a Test captain and one of the world's leading allrounders.

The older Pollock brother ("Pooch" to Graeme's "Little Dog") learned his
trade bowling to one of cricket's greatest batsmen in the backyard of their
Port Elizabeth home. Something of a tearaway as a young bowler, Pollock
never really lost his killer instinct even as age and dodgy knees began to
take their toll. He formed a productive partnership with the Rhodesian swing
bowler Joe Partridge in Australia in 1963-64 which enabled South Africa
unexpectedly to draw the series 2-2, and another at the end of the decade
with a youthful Mike Procter as Australia were beaten 3-1 and 4-0 in
successive home series.

For the Pollock brothers, though, few moments in their careers eclipsed
the 1965 Trent Bridge Test, when Peter took 5 for 53 and 5 for 34 and Graeme made 125 and 59 as South Africa won by 94 runs, a victory that enabled them to
take the three-Test series 1-0. Peter took 116 wickets in 28 Tests at 24.18
and also made two fifties to average 21.67 as a handy lower-order batsman. A
trained journalist, Peter is a lay preacher, and there are few more
astute (or single-minded) judges in the game.
Peter Robinson

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